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global-typings-bundler
Advanced tools
Converts a collection of external module definition files into a single .d.ts file for distribution alongside a browser-ready JS bundle.
Bundles your TypeScript definition files, like a JS module bundler does for your source files.
WARNING: experimental/unstable, use at your own risk
npm install global-typings-bundler --save-dev
import { writeFileSync } from "fs";
import { bundleTypings } from "global-typings-bundler";
const result = bundleTypings("MyReactComponent", "path/to/entry/index.d.ts", {
"react": "React",
"react-dom": "ReactDOM",
"react-addons-css-transition-group": "React.addons.CSSTransitionGroup",
});
writeFileSync("my-global-typings.d.ts", result, "utf8");
bundleTypings(globalName: string, typingsEntryPoint: string, externals?: Object): string
globalName
: The name of the desired global namespace.typingsEntryPoint
: Path to the typings file for the module's entry point.externals
: An optional object which maps external module names to their corresponding globals.
For example, "react" would map to "React", "react-addons-test-utils" -> "React.addons.TestUtils", etc.
If your module imports any external libraries, you must include them here or the bundling will fail.Granular external module definition files as generated with tsc --module commonjs
:
my-module/
├── foo.d.ts
├── bar.d.ts
├── index.d.ts
└── someFolder/
└── nestedModule.d.ts
// index.d.ts
export { IFoo, parseExport } from "./foo";
export { IBar } from "./bar";
// foo.d.ts
import * as ts from "typescript";
import { someGlobalVariable } from "./someFolder/nestedModule";
export interface IFoo {
...
}
export function parseExport(exportDecl: ts.ExportDeclaration): IFoo[] {
...
}
// someFolder/nestedModule.d.ts
export const someGlobalVariable: string;
A flattened .d.ts
file that matches the shape of the namespaces created by a JS bundler like webpack or browserify:
declare namespace __MyModule.__SomeFolder.__NestedModule {
export const someGlobalVariable: string;
}
declare namespace __MyModule.__Foo {
import someGlobalVariable = __MyModule.__SomeFolder.__NestedModule.someGlobalVariable;
export interface IFoo {
...
}
export declare function parseExport(exportDecl: ts.ExportDeclaration): IFoo[];
}
declare namespace MyModule {
export import IFoo = __MyModule.__Foo.IFoo;
export import parseExport = __MyModule.__Foo.parseExport;
export import IBar = __MyModule.__Bar.IBar;
}
The __
namespaces are fake and do not correspond to real values at runtime in JS.
As we transitioned our TypeScript libraries to ES6 module syntax and our applications to use a JS module loader, we wanted to retain interoperability with older applications that did not use a module loader or bundler. This is easy to do for the JS -- you simply bundle using a tool like webpack and you're ready to use the browser-global version of the library with a package manager like Bower. However, the typings generated by the compiler are unusable in these legacy applications because of the lack of module loader (they can't have any external module imports/exports). So, we built this tool to bridge the gap. It allows you to author a TypeScript library in ES6 module syntax and distribute it as a strongly typed CommonJS module on NPM as well as a strongly typed global module on Bower.
Note that this tool is distinct from dts-bundle, which also bundles up external module definition files, but does not flatten the module structure into namespaces.
The following structures are not currently supported and will cause the library to either throw an error or generate incorrect typings.
export default ...
import foo, { bar } from ...
export * from ...
export { foo, bar as baz }
. (Note: export { foo, bar as baz } from ...
is supported.)Quick Start:
npm run lint
npm run build
In order to test your changes:
test/cases
. Each test case is its own directory
and has a file named params.json
which supplies the parameters to pass when building the bundled typings file.
If your code changes are supposed to affect the output of the library, ensure at least one test case is affected
as well. If you're simply refactoring code, it's fine to leave the test cases as they are.npm run build
to build the latest version of your code.npm run test
to generate output for all test cases into the test/output
directory.
npm run test-diff
to see the differences or view the differences between
test/accepted-output
and test/output
with your favorite editor/diff tool.test/output
is what is desired, run npm run test-accept
.test/accepted-output
.Publishing to NPM:
npm run all
npm publish dist/
v0.1.2
FAQs
Converts a collection of external module definition files into a single .d.ts file for distribution alongside a browser-ready JS bundle.
The npm package global-typings-bundler receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, global-typings-bundler popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that global-typings-bundler demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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